The Vital Roles of Reputation in Othello by Shakespeare

662 Words2 Pages

In the play Othello written by Shakespeare, reputation plays an important role that leads to tragedy. It leads to tragedy because it reverses the fortune of the play, and it allows character to manipulate it for self-advantage, and leads to the downfall of tragic hero. Reputation has influence almost every characters in the play, especially the main ones Othello, Iago, and Cassio. They similarly suffer from or benefit from how others think about them. In the next few paragraphs will explain why reputation is extremely important and how it serves as a backbone of the play.
The tragic hero Othello holds a high position in society base on his reputation on wars. This reputation of he’s safe him from getting harm of Brabantio’s charge, “O thou foul thief, where hast thou stowed my daughter?” (Shakespeare 1.3 61-62) and “to prison, till fit time” (Shakespeare 1.3 84) Brabantio’s complaints against Othello of stealing away Desdemona makes Brabantio mad and he wants to throw Othello in jail. However Othello didn’t end up in jail because of his reputation, the Senator and the Duke see him as a “Valiant” (Shakespeare 1.3 48) soldier and value upon him. Based on the favoritism of the Senator and the Duke, they give him a chance to clarify himself, “but, Othello, speak. / Did you by indirect and forced courses / Subdue and poison this young maid’s affections?” (Shakespeare 40). Without his reputation, if he is another dark skinned person, this chance wouldn’t have given to him, and he would’ve received the punishment. The article The Human Fiction says “The greater a soldier Othello becomes, the less able he is to deal with civilian life”. By this it means his reputation of being a great soldier makes him special and stands out from the crow...

... middle of paper ...

...olent Othello becomes. And the more Desdemona trying to help out Cassio the more Othello perceive Cassio as a backstabbing friend. The moment Othello questions Cassio, a complete reversal of fortune begins. Not only did Othello distrust Cassio and loses his physical sense, but he also loses his control on his life for blindly trusting Iago. His mind is so manipulated by Iago that he can’t think straight. Iago’s reputation as an honest man and Cassio’s reputation as an adulterer has generated Othello to become a murderer. He mistrusts those who are most loyal to him and trusts the wrong people. His misjudgments led to a dramatic tragedy. Iago once says “Reputation is an idle and most false/ imposition, oft got without merit and lost/ without deserving.” (Shakespeare 2.3 262-264). By that he means a reputation is a valueless and fake quality that others impose on us.

More about The Vital Roles of Reputation in Othello by Shakespeare

Open Document